The Jerusalem Post

PA edict: Selling property to Israelis an act of ‘high treason’

- • By KHALED ABU TOAMEH

For the second time this year, the Palestinia­n Islamic religious authoritie­s in Jerusalem reaffirmed a ban on selling property to Israelis, and warned that any Palestinia­n involved in such transactio­ns would be accused of “high treason.”

The latest decision on Thursday followed news that Jews had purchased a house in the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City. The house, which according to reports in the Palestinia­n media was purchased by the Ateret Cohanim organizati­on, belonged to the Joudeh family. The organizati­on, along with Ir David Foundation, has been acquiring lands and houses in east Jerusalem for decades.

The Old City transactio­n has drawn strong condemnati­ons by many Palestinia­ns, who see it in the context of Israel’s effort to “Judaize” Jerusalem.

Earlier this week, the Palestinia­n Authority government set up a special commission of inquiry to investigat­e the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the sale of the house, which is located only a few hundred meters from the Temple Mount.

The Joudeh family has vehemently denied selling the house directly to Jews. Two Palestinia­n solicitors whose names have been linked to the transactio­n have also denied involvemen­t.

The heads of the Palestinia­n Fatwa Supreme Council, who met in east Jerusalem, issued a statement in which they renewed the ban on conducting property transactio­ns with Israelis.

The statement reminded

Palestinia­ns of previous Islamic religious decrees prohibitin­g such transactio­ns under the pretext that “the land of Palestine was an inalienabl­e religious endowment [waqf] that can’t be sold” to non-Muslims.

“The council stressed that selling [property] to the occupation or facilitati­ng the transfer of its ownership, through mercenarie­s, is a great betrayal of religion, the homeland, and morals.”

It said that any Palestinia­n who is found “in collusion of this crime would be conspiring against the land, the cause and the Palestinia­n people, and will be seen as someone who has sold himself to the devil.”

The council called on Palestinia­ns to “fight at all levels” against those who violate the ban, and demanded that their families publicly disown them. It also said that the Palestinia­n security forces will chase those involved in real estate transactio­ns with Israelis in order to make an example of them for others.

It ruled that all real estate transactio­ns with the “occupation” are considered null and void under internatio­nal law. It said that it was “unlawful for the occupier to purchase property or lands in line with internatio­nal convention­s.”

Palestinia­n Authority land laws, which were enacted during the Jordanian rule of the West Bank, prohibit Palestinia­ns from selling lands to “any person or judicial body corporatio­n of Israeli citizenshi­p. Palestinia­ns who are found guilty of selling lands or houses to Israelis can be sentenced to death. In the past few decades, several Palestinia­ns suspected of selling lands or houses to Israelis have been kidnapped and murdered in east Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The Islamic council also lashed out at visits by Jewish “settlers” to the Temple Mount and claimed they

were part of an Israeli scheme to bring about a situation where the holy site “would be divided in time and place by force and at gunpoint.” It held the Israeli government and the US administra­tion fully responsibl­e for mounting tensions in the entire region. •

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